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El nino tiene mucho sueno

2006-11-08 09:00:41 · 8 answers · asked by Ryan G 2 in Society & Culture Languages

8 answers

The boy ( kid ) is very sleepy

Ealasaid is very wrong about sueño and sueno, lucky is suertudo and sueno means " I sound" and sueño is well.. sleep or slumber and sleepy really is "somnoliento" ( means con sueño the true translation of sleepy ) but since it is more commonly said tengo sueño somnoliento ( somnolent ) is not widely used unless in formal speech or things like that.

aaaaaaaaaaaand TWO POINTS-DOS PUNTOS-DUE PONTI

2006-11-08 09:03:16 · answer #1 · answered by Carlos 4 · 0 0

El means the, in this context. Nino means boy when the squiggily tilde is over the second N. Mucho means very. Tiene is the he/she/you(formal) form of to have. Sueno means sleepy when the squiggily tilde is over the N. If there's no tilde, it means lucky. Altogether it means The boy is very sleepy, or The boy is very lucky.

2006-11-08 17:08:06 · answer #2 · answered by Ealasaid 1 · 1 2

The boy is really tired.

2006-11-08 20:17:11 · answer #3 · answered by ocfan1217 2 · 0 0

The boy is very lucky OR The very lucky boy.

2006-11-08 17:03:33 · answer #4 · answered by ~<**@$h/e@**>~ 3 · 0 1

The boy is very tierd.

2006-11-08 17:35:38 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

This child (boy) is very tired

2006-11-08 17:53:08 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Carlos is right.

2006-11-08 17:12:34 · answer #7 · answered by JAT 6 · 0 2

no! is it a swear word

2006-11-08 17:02:41 · answer #8 · answered by lizella 5 · 0 3

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